[April 29, 2014]NEW YORK (Reuters) — The next chief
executive of Berkshire Hathaway should be the only one at the
company to get options, Warren Buffett, the current head of the
sprawling conglomerate, said on Monday.

In an interview with Fortune, Buffett said he had written a memo to
the Berkshire <BRKa.N> board to suggest the next CEO should be "the
only one who would receive options because he would be the only one
who is responsible for the overall success of the operation."

Buffett, an investing icon and the world's third-richest man, came
under fire last week when he said that he disagreed with a
controversial equity compensation package for Coca-Cola <KO.N>
management but nonetheless abstained from voting.

He told CNBC last week that he "didn't want to express any
disapproval of management but we did disapprove of the plan."

He's since drawn broad criticism for not voting against the measure,
which passed.

Buffett in the past has spoken out about stock options for
executives as expensive and ineffective.

In 1995, for example, Buffett wrote: "Who, after all, refuses a free
lottery ticket?" and called such arrangements "wasteful to the
company."

Still, Buffett said on Monday that executive compensation is not out
of whack with pay rates in the rest of the country.

"If you run a multibillion-dollar company the difference between a
10 and an eight is huge in terms of value," he said.

"Still, almost on a voluntary basis, I think it should be somewhat
restrained in some cases."